Sunday, January 26, 2020

Grumpy with a side of tea

I've had shunt and forehead pain with a side nausea and right eye pain consistently for over a week now. The eye pain ( strabismus surgery eye ) happens at the same time as shunt and distal catheter pain. My shunt is probably adjusting itself or just being an unruly medical device or both. I've also had scalp sensitivity where my shunt is and am more aware of this when I comb my hair.

Either way, it's made me grumpy and I've been staying indoors when I don't have anywhere I need to be. Pain reliever's haven't been working.

I don't think the settings are have changed. Although, I wouldn't have anyway to check this because...

1. My neurologist doesn't know how to check my shunt's settings
2. The last neurosurgeon I saw in 2018, didn't know how to do this either. Because...

Apparently the shunt I was given isn't used anywhere nearby.

And this is just so helpful...

I can't go back to my ex neurosurgeon (who placed this shunt) because I fired him and he got animated into one of my films...

All I can do is wait for this to go away.

And there's always a little time for a tea...

Sunday, January 5, 2020

3

I had three days of pain free no drama from my shunt this week. Yesterday, barometric pressure headaches returned.  Apparently, there is snow in the atmosphere expected later today.  I've had episodes of dizziness since yesterday. The shunt is adjusting itself again and I feel distal catheter pain in my abdomen yesterday and today. Saturday morning around 11am was when I felt light throbbing from my shunt valve at the top of my head. This happened while I was driving yesterday, which almost never happens. Today, besides the pressure in my forehead, there is some pain in the back of my head from the chiari malformation, I acquired during the shunt revision in 2009.








Thursday, January 2, 2020

2010s

I've been pain free for two whole days this week. Which means...
X Ray image of my shunt 2014 to present.

No elevated csf pressure in my forehead.

No pain from the shunt valve and/or distal catheter in my abdomen and neck.

No nausea associated with the shunt adjusting itself.

No right eye pain (strabismus surgery eye)

No dizziness when moving my head or sensitive scalp.

I also haven't heard my shunt beep since 2016.

So for now, I don't feel my shunt at all. Something I haven't experienced in a while. I took this for granted prior to my shunt being moved in 2009.

Before then, I only knew the shunt was in my brain when it stopped working....

In the 2000s I had one revision in 2009.

In the 2010s I had shunt revision surgery in 2011 and two in 2014.

Having chronic pain makes me grumpy/irritable/depressed and there have been times when I wished I could remove my shunt myself. Obviously, this can't be done...My nervous system cannot survive without one...

It's a great feeling to not be in pain and not want to wage war against my medical device.

Here's hoping for less pain and no shunt revisions in the next decade.